Jacques Lizot’s critique

There is a cinematic quality between the clash of Napoleon Chagnon and 
Jacques Lizot. Chagnon, the blustering American who like to fire pistols 
to intimidate the Yanomami, could have been played by the young John 
Wayne. Lizot, the gay French disciple of structuralist Claude 
Levi-Strauss who seduced young Yanomami with gifts of cigarettes and 
pasta, could have been played by Alain Renais.

It is too bad that Patrick Tierney chose to emphasize Lizot’s sexual 
predations in his “Darkness in El Dorado”. While there certainly could 
be a case made that any adult taking sexual advantage of a young woman 
or man for that matter deserves opprobrium, one cannot escape feeling 
that Tierney was exhibiting old-fashioned homophobia in the name of 
defending Indian rights.

Although Chagnon and Lizot started out as collaborators, they eventually 
parted ways—no doubt a function of deep differences over how to regard 
the Indians. For Chagnon, they were like Jane Goodall’s chimpanzees 
waging primate war on their enemies. For Lizot, they were more like the 
Bonobo chimps that used sexual play—including homosexual—to relieve the 
tensions that lead to violence.

To be fair to Lizot, he did not literally think that the Yanomami were 
like chimps. In fact his main objection to Chagnon was over his 
sociobiology, a bogus science that reduces everything to genes.

read full article: 
http://louisproyect.wordpress.com/2009/08/06/yanomami-science-wars-part-six/

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